The Folly Irregulars discussion
Characters & Stuff (spoilers)
>
Which book have you re-read the most?
date
newest »

message 1:
by
carol.
(new)
Feb 18, 2018 09:15PM

reply
|
flag

I also love re-reading "Foxglove Summer". Invisible carniverous unicorns for the win!





lol! And with Lata having her problems remembering which of the early books Molly's history came up has me thinking about rereading as well-- I listened/read those two the least.

I'll run over it again tonight, Lata. I meant to do it over the weekend.

Thanks very much, Margaret. I guess I want to find it and highlight it (my copies of the eBooks are chock full of highlights) just so I can see how many ways Aaronovitch rewards his readers for rereading.

It's the first book that will introduce many of the re-occurring characters: Abigail, Kumar, Varvara, and another of my favorite voices, Zach, Guleed starts to get a bigger part, and we meet DC Carey. Guest appearances include Madame Chang's interpreter, Seawold is back from leave (fukinn' weird shit) and Stephanopoulos gets her first case. We meet Oberon. Just a great assortment.
Then there's the funnies... the River at the art gallery who has a dog that is 'captain of all my other dogs.' Peter --wrongfully--correcting himself to say, "XX and I."


Nightingale knocked me for six again. When Peter suggests taking Toby and ghost hunting/tracking his master's killer's movements, Nightingale comments something like: while stone retains vestigia very well the supernatural elements of the area could interfere.
I'm going, wait a minute, why didn't I notice this before? And what is supernatural about Covent Garden???

That Ben is so sneaky about inserting little details.


Maybe not. But he does plot quite a bit. Remember Skygarden bneing mentioned in passing in "Whispers Underground" and then it becomes a main plot element of "Broken Homes".

BA left a post on his blog about the setting for the book including a link to a satellite image of the area of escape through the forest at midnight - I spent a long time scouring that map and rereading the scene, following their path as I read. It's details like that that make it the book I return to most often.
